Abstract
The subjective experience of flow in professional dancers was analyzed using interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA). Flow is believed to be a psychological state in which the mind and body ‘just click’, creating optimal performance. Unfortunately, sport and performance research have severely neglected reviewing the flow experience in dancers, leading to a significant gap in dance psychology literature. Nine professional dancers, male and female, specializing in ballet, contemporary, jazz, Irish and Canadian dance were interviewed using in‐depth, semi‐structured interviews. The results recovered three main higher order themes consistent with Csikszentmihalyi (Citation1975): the autotelic experience, challenge vs. skill and absorption in the task. In addition to gaining insight into the experience of flow in dancers, the results showed that dance has its own unique facilitators and inhibitors of flow. The results offer choreographers, artistic directors and dancers information regarding the importance of environmental, social and physical elements of the dance world, thus enabling them to manipulate factors, whenever applicable, to enhance the flow experience.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank all of the dancers and companies that agreed to participate in this study, including the Scottish Ballet, The Curve Foundation and Riverdance. I would also like to thank my supervisor, Stewart Ollis, for his support and advice throughout this process. Thank you to the reviewers of the journal Research in Dance Education for their comments and suggestions that were duly noted.